Adventurers` Club News Mar 1981 - The Adventurers` Club of Los
Transcription
Adventurers` Club News Mar 1981 - The Adventurers` Club of Los
ADVENTURERS CLUB NEWS Beauty is the beast • 1t MARCH 1981 IN THIS ISSUE ' In The Library with John Boden I Adventurer of the Week - Jack Cameron, Volmer Jensen ' January 8, 1981 Special Business Meeting / "The Cargo Cults" "Psychic Discovery in Alexandria" The Christmas Party Aave-aturero-' , ' ub1w PUBLISHED MONTHLY BY THE ADVENTURERS' CLUB. LOS ANGELES 706 WEST PICO BOULEVARD, LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA 90017 March 1981 Volume 24:3 Founded 1922 A RECORDING OF HISTORY THE WEEKLY CLUB MEETINGS (Our Thursday Night Safaris) December 4, 1980 ON SAFARI AROUND 706 with OWEN O'CALLAGHAN Convivial diners and guests gathered into meeting chairs at the sound of eight bells. During the reading of the traditional toast, lights were darkened and one bell sounded as President DWAYNE MERRY announced the passing of Honorary Member No. 893, Peter De Paolo, Auto Racing's most respected Ambassador. Only a month before, at the Night of High Adventure, the wrench Peter had used during his long racing career was presented to the Club. De Paolo, 1925 Indianapolis 500 winner, had a career which embodied the history of auto racing both in the U.S. and Europe. ED LAURANCE, speaking out of a deep personal friendship, made a frank and explicit report on the grave illness of esteemed member GEORGE WURZBURGER. "I think you all love him," Ed said, "I cannot do anything for him and I do not believe anyone else can. About all we can do is say a prayer for him." TRAVELLERS: Twenty miles East of Victoria, B.C. is 56-square-miles Orcas Island (pop. 3,000) and among its fine homes is PHIL ROULAC's. Phil, with son (grandson of the Club's Founder) visited the Club and gave a unique report on his sojourn to England and Ireland. The occasion was the annual meeting of the British Driving Society which had invited the American Carriage Society. Phil attended a dinner at Buckingham Palace as guest of the Crown Equerry, who is in charge of the Queen's carriages, chariots, horses, guards. Phil then went to Ireland, met some of the Master fox hunters, and rode the beautiful hunt country. He made the jumps without coming acropper. "One thing that keeps my interest peaked," he said, "is that marvellous monthly magazine the Club publishes. Sometimes I read it twice," We acknowledged the great editorship and writings of Keith Young and Al Adams and its other contributors. Gracious tribute gratefully received by us at the News. LEE TALBERT, returned after a long spell, told of off-shore oil production off Palawan Island - 8,000 bbls. per day from five wells. Typhoons have not stopped production in the South China Sea. (A Recording of History......to page 3) ADVENTURERS' CLUB NEWS Page 2 THE ADVENTURERS' CLUB NEWS USPS (389-310) IN THE LIBRARY - with JOHN BODEN Published monthly Editor .........Bob Williams Reporters -Owen O'Callaghan, Smokey Storms John Boden and others. SUBSCRIPTION PRICE. . . $1.00 per year Entered as second class postage at the post office at Los Angeles, California. CLUB MEETS AT ADVENTURERS' CLUB ROOM 706 West Pico Boulevard Los Angeles, CA 90015 Phone 749-3537 (Thursday nights only) 1981 OFFICERS President ......George Manchester 1st Vice President ......Dick Kyle 2nd Vice President . . . Owen O'Callaghan Secretary ........Roy Roberts Treasurer ........Charles Ross BOARD OF DIRECTORS William A. Hawkinson John F. Cameron Peter C. Parfitt Donald G. Orosz "Smokey" C. Storms William L. Carr Dwayne L. Merry WHAT! NO STORY?? As you ha've already noticed, this issue does not lead off with another rousing adventure story. Because of the necessity of reporting in complete detail the news highlights and programs for each week, the accumulation of material has dictated that this issue of the Adventurers' Club News be devoted exclusively to the reporting of program material in order that the time lapse between the date of the meeting and the reportingof the program be as short as possible. Several "stem winders" of stories are on hand on the Editor's desk but they will have to wait until future issues in order to catch up with the calendar. Ed. Whether or not any member follows Herman Jesson in a visit to the Andaman Islands they might wish to expand their knowledge of those rarely mentioned islands of the Bay of Bengal along with the humid Nicobars. Herman returned with "The Andaman & Nico bar Information" for the Club describing the government, industrial development, flora and natural resources. * * * * China is a land of mystery to most of us known mostly as the origin of fantastic art both useful and ornamental. We have heard that they invented paper, the compass, printing and gunpowder when the majority of Europeans lived in primitive ignorance with very little of the knowledge and amenities we associate with civilization. But the snatches of reference we see as to that dynasty or other dynasty seems a blur to us when we hear of her long history. "China by a Frenchman, Henri Cartier-Bresson and Barbara Brakeley Miller is a paperback that throws light with short text and photos on the early conditions of the present Red regime from 1948 to 1964. The part by Miller of only twenty pages gives a capsuled view of 4,000 years of the history of China, leaving you with a clear insight into the human history of that great people. "China And The World Press" was presented to JOHN BOOTH by the author Hollington K. Tong in 1948 and traces the struggle of Generalissimo Chiang Kai-shek with the Communist forces and the intracacies of political and military situations with which he had to deal. —John Boden Page 3 March 1981 (A Recording of History..... from page 1) A pathetic note was struck when Talbert described a boat-load of 37 women and children Vie tnam refugees who, early morning, tied up to the one-hundred-ton-plus storage tanker. Talbert ordered food and reconstituted milk sent to them and watched at their amazement. I-fe later visited them at the Palawan refugee center. A gem of precision, PETER PARFITT, who was with the World Affairs Council, recounted all too briefly his trip to India, Sri Lanka and Nepal. He did mention a few highlights: a two and one-half hour elephant ride, dinner aboard a sweet scented sandalwood houseboat in Kashmir and a Bengal tiger felling its water buffalo victim. Too short, Peter. Returned from his third trip to China, JOHN DELMONTE visited Ichang where the world's largest hydro-electric plant is under construction. Part of the Yangtze is being dammed in the project. Along the river are the carved steps where a generation ago coolies pulled boat up river. At Kweilin, John visited huge caverns the rival of any in the world, recently opened In Burma, at Mandalay, he found the perfect place to jog - an old square fort whose walls measured exactly one and one-half miles. John also visited Sri Lanka, Malaysia and India. POSTCARDS: Datelined: Honolulu, LON DE COURSEY reports a cruise around the Islands. "Everything is looking up." A second card, a week later, merely said, "Things are looking better all the time." This card was signed both by Lon and TOM STEVENSON. It was subsequently reported by Lon that Tom contracted an infection which spread throughout his body and Tom is yet at the Ross-Loos Hospital in Honolulu. A NOTE: From Pretoria, So. Africa, GEORGE MICHAEL sends profound regrets on hearing of the death of CHARLIE BRISCO No. 663. Wishes happiest of holidays to the members. In an addendum to his program a few weeks ago, GERRY EVANS told of visiting a famous old gun maker in London. When he knocked on the door, the old family retainer opened it and recognizing Gerry, shouted upstairs, "John! John! Mr. Evans is visiting from the Colonies!" Adventurer of the Week: Give a man a boat, an uncharted course, an isolated shore and a chance to explore - that's sailing. Given the ten minute slot for Adventurer of the Week, JACK CAMERON took us to Isla Isabela, half a hundred miles below the tip of Baja California's long peninsula (Cabo San Luis) and as many miles from the Mexican mainland. Isabela's beaches are not whitened sand but the bleached bones and vertebraes of sharks, for the only humans who visit its shore, as they have for long decades, are the Mexican shark fishermen. The only permanent inhabitants are the thousands upon thousands of frigate birds. Climb the island's ancient volcanic crater and there you will find him . that huge, proud, male frigate - its red pouch gloriously distended in the ancient ritual of attracting the female to a pre-nesting mating site. The island abounds in birds, some who have come from as far south as the Galapagos. Here they nest and breed and feed. When, toward sunset, the sail-er weighs anchor and his craft disappears into the vast oceanic horizon, he leaves behind one o1 Nature's many miracles, one performed in splendid isolation. That's what sailing is all about. Page 4 ADVENTURERS' CLUB NEWS PROGRAM - December 4, 1980 '7he Cargo Cult of John Fri,m" - STU BRUCE and BILL LYTE The introduction of an old member always sheds new light on some aspect of his personality or his travels about which we may not have known or have forgotten or mislaid. This function is one of the fine services our Program Chairman, CHET WILCZEK, so admirably performs. It is his trademark. STU BRUCE is stranger neither to the Club nor the podium but it is stimulating to be regaled by his extensive vita: partly educated in Cypress and Beirut - - - by foot and camel over Algeria's Hoggar Mountains - - - rafted Ethiopia's Omo River - - - by dog sled down the East coast of Greenland - - - five trips, beginning with the Dutch governments expedition in 1961, to New Guinea - - - Director, Vice President and President (1970). Nor is any less treatment given the new member: BILL LYTE, U.C. Santa Barbara graduate in 1975, Construction Engineer in hazardous and toxic wastes - - - surfer in California, Hawaii, Bali, New Zealand, Australia, Indonesia - - back-packer - - - mountaineer - - - travels in S.E. Asia, Caribbean, Europe, Egypt. The focus of their joint-venture, odd venture adventure was the John Frum Cult of the New Hebrides. Stu began the program with a learned and fascinating summary of the Cargo Cult which, concurrent with the colonization of the South Sea Islands, is one hundred years old. The cult is messianic and semi-religious usually led by village messiahs who explain that the vast influx of wealth and goods brought by the white men (in white vessels; later, airplanes) are actually meant for the native people but is being diverted by the white men whose gods are superior. Frustrated by white man's laws, taxation, discrimination, and work edicts, natives followed their messiahs eagerly. They gave up European clothes, quit working for the white man, threw away money, stopped going to church. Some behaviour was aberrational. Huts were torn down, gardens uprooted, mock ships (and airplanes) were built. The belief was that by appealing to their gods, the cargoes and goods would be brought to them. In 1940, on the island of Tanna, southernmost of the New Hebrides, at a time when the price of copra dropped out of the bottom, a singular figure, said to have bleached hair, a high pitched voice, clad in a coat of many pearl buttons, emerged. He claimed to be the earthly manifestation of Karakoram, Volcano god of the islands. This was John Frum. Frum exorted a return to old customs, to traditional dancing, to a greater consumption of the potent cava, to nonpayment of taxes. He prophesied the eruption of volcanos, the flatting of Tanna. Significantly, he foretold the coming of the Americans and they would bring the cargoes and the good life. A disturbed British-French condominium government had Frum arrested, jailed for three years, and finally exiled. The movement was successfully suppressed - until the arrival of the Americans who were invading Guadalcanal. The Americans were friendly, paid good wages, were generous to a fault. The cult had a sweeping revival. The good years had come. Frum, who since disappeared, was right. But the war ended; the American's left. The natives seized on the promise by Frum that he would return. And, when he did, their youth would be restored, there would be no March 1981 iess; no need to tend gardens, trees or pigs. The belief spread that John Frum was in Ame rica, collecting cargos, preparing for his glo rious return. They wait yet. Each year there is a celebration called the Festival of John Frum. It was to attend the Festival that Bruce, Lyte a nd Max Wurtzel (a frequent Club visitor) re turned last February. Trouble was brewing when the party arrived at Tanfla. What the Frum movement did was politicize the people and give them a sense of i n dependence. As in all things politic, there were two sides. Bill Lyte took the story from here. The Fre nch-supported party had lost a close election to the British-backed group. The day the Bruce group arrived, armed natives had surrounded the airport - 200 men with bows and arrows, backed by a contingent of Tannans on horseback. They had been waiting the arrival of the French High Commissioner. Confrontational politics. Independence in the air. For our intrepid travellers, the situation was touch and go. Who could predict what would happen? The mob scene shifted to Government House, in front of which the French Commissioner was given a list of demands. Nassi, the wrinkled and wily elder Tannan statesman had hidden the keys to Government House. Across the island is Sulfur Bay. It was the business of the Bruce party to get there in time for the Frum Festival. They disengaged from the political imbroglio and set out through the jungles on their journey. Let it be added that the natives won their i ndependence and the New Hebrides is now called Vanuatu. Tanna's jungle roads are rain-soaked, mudenmiring, volcanic ash "roads." Outside the village of John From stood a sign in pidgin Page 5 English which read, "Certain death awaits you if you pass this point." The village, untouched for years, had an eerie air - everything besprinkled with volcanic ash. The original church was There were crude palm-constructed intact. resemblances of airplanes and crude, narrow "runways," built in the hope of attracting cargo-laden craft. On to the Festival. Stu Bruce narrated. To accompany him, Guest Tom Flynn played native drums. The Frum Cult is widespread throughout the 72 islands of the New Hebrides (Pop: 92,000). Many of these Melanisians make the yearly pilgrimage to Tanna. In front of the red cross of John Frum, the festival begins at 6:00 am. Pictures of Christ and the astronauts adorn the Church altar. (From predicted the U.S. would go to the moon. The astronaut picture is proof of his prophetic powers.) Prayers are offered; chants are sung. And there are parades - parades of villagers, each elegantly costumed according to his village, his island; parades of warriors armed with wooden rifles and red bayonets (symbol of a willingness to fight for independence). Some with "U.S.A." emblazoned on their chests. And dances - primitive "true" tribal dances, latter-day folk dances, dances depicting fishing and hunting. And feasting - pig and smoldering tubered vegetables. And drinking. cava in cava ceremonies, cava for the sake of drinking, more cava. On and on the festival rolls to hypnotic drum beats - in the morning, throughout the afternoon and into the torch-lit night. In the final ceremony, troops march - symbols of a peoples' unity, tribute totheir God-like protector and inspiration, John Frum. (Reported by Owen O'Callaghan) Page 6 December 11, 1980 ON SAFARI AROUND 706 with OWEN O'CALLAGHAN Wanda Bronson, our caterer, had the night off. This, of course, opened the floodgates of Club culinary cleverness and, this night, their concoctions concentrated on that cleverest of all dishes, chili. Maybe, chili ought to be the symbol of the Club - its ingredients are so indefinable, so individually characteristic, so hotly defended. At any rate, no man here who didn't enjoy the diversity of the cook-out. All praise to our first-rate chefs: WALLY BAGLEY, JACK CAMERON, LOU HIGGER and "SMOK.. EY" STORMS. Gentlemen, take a Texan bow. Eight bells and the cook-out came to a halt. President DWAYNE MERRY read the silent toast. Guests were introduced. TRAVELLERS: Per usual, HERMAN JESSON beat his card back. Prevailed upon to make a report, Herman spoke glowingly of his daughter's management of Jessonia and her plans to further build up his Amazon island. Over the years, fifty or more Club members have rafted to this haven in the jungle. "You wonder about a guy who has been absent from the club for three and a half years," mused HAROLD WARD. Touring the Carribean, Harold stopped at St. Thomas Island where he decided to check-up on absented ED BODEN. The "Kittywake" has been repaired after its racing accident; Ed's surveying business moves apace. But Harold found the real answer. "When a fellow is young, handsome, is a bachelor, has a boat of his own, sets his Own pace, and lives in a paradise, he'd be a darn fool to return to Los Angeles." ADVENTURERS' CLUB NEWS SICK REPORT: President Dwayne read a letter sent to CHET WILCZEK from the ailing FRED DEMARA. "Many and sincere thanks for the Club tape and card you sent. Both were much appreciated and enjoyed. I really miss the Club and enjoy news from it - regularly supplied by GERRY PRICE, et al (here today for a visit). It's been "on and off" for almost two years now as far as my health goes. With every good and kind personal wishes . . Gerry Price, on the Board of the Good Samaritan Hospital, sees Fred frequently. "About five weeks ago," he reported, "Fred was not expected to live. He was then in a diabetic coma. Shortly after, the doctors told him they would have to take his left leg. But Fred would not agree to it. Surgery was performed on the gangrenous Leg. Parts of the leg bone and foot removed. The doctors held little hope." "Today, five pins were removed from the leg and foot and Fred is coming along well. It is great now to speak to the old Fred we know. His color is good, he responds well. He is coming along fine." While at the mike, Gerry also reported on JOHN DAVIDSON who is having surgery on one eye. Not to worry, John is already arranging to go to Australia, thence, to Zaire with JERRY NILSSON to shoot a black-maned lion on his 92nd birthday. Not a member who doubts that it will happen. LON DE COURSEY made report on TOM STEVENSON. Hospitalized in Honolulu in critical condition, Tom had a gangrenous right leg, the result of complications arising out of diabetes. The leg was removed from above the knee. It is well to remember that while there are parallels in medical maladies, no two cases are exactly alike. Lou talked to Tom's wife who said he was doing just fine. His spirits are Page 7 March 1981 up and he wants to be remembered to the Club. We look forward to the return of the three stalwarts as soon as possible. A toast to their health and spirits. * * * * DICK McCARTNEY gave an open invitation to all fishermen, duck hunters, clammers, scuba divers to avail themselves of his new Trailer pad on the beach of Conception Bay, 14 miles south of Mtilege. Contact him and the key is yours. Then he made a bombshell announcement enough to make a man drool. He is entering his motor home in the Motoring Challenge. This is an event in which 400 entries (five classes) will drive from Peking to Paris, 12,000 miles, following the route pretty much of the transSiberian railway. It starts June 10 and ends on Bastille Day (July 14) in Paris. Unhappily, all entries are now closed. It is one thing to go half-way around the world on wheels. But TOM LINDHOLM is going all the way around the world by boat. Leaving Christmas, he will take his 41-foot sloop down to Panama, then head up the East Coast. In September of '82 a fifty boat race (single-handed) and proceed "the wrong way" around the world, via Capetown, Sydney, and Rio. Should take about seven months. May the wind be ever at your back. PROGRAM "Psychic Discovery in Alexandria" by Steven Schwartz The Mobius Group, of which the guest speaker, Stephan A. Schwartz is President, is a research organization which combines scientists and psychics in the hope of resolving questions neither alone can answer. Schwartz is a Fellow of the Royal Geographic Society, consultant oceanographer for the Navy, former Special Assistant for Research and Analysis for Chief of Naval Operations, former Editorial Staff member of National Geographic, author (The Secret Valley of Time), and Explorer Club of New York member. Schwartz acknowledged the skepticism toward psychics but assured his audience that his group does not "do" fortunes, has neither crystal balls nor black cats, nor do they hunt treasure. The group works with an aspect of an existence of which needs to be proved under rigorously controlled field conditions. Call it intuition or hunch or vision, there is in the human being a capacity to make intuitive leaps in time (and space), a capacity to know things other than by way of the intellect. The two field tests discussed tonight discovery of a sunken ship and the Alexandria finds - were undertaken because archeology offers a special kind of rigorous protocol to its experiments. Given what archeologists know, it is then possible to construct a challenge, the solution of which finds no other answer except for psychic phenomenon. Within such constraints, psychic power can be defined and developed as yet another tool in man's quest for knowledge. The first film demonstrated the basic process. It was the first experiment in undersea psychic archeology. Whatever technology archeology has to recover the detritus of prior civilizations - to recover history, under water - there is none developed to tell the archeologist where to look. Can some strange, yet unexplained human power help the archeologist to see through fathoms of water where he could not otherwise look? At the Institute for Marine and Coastal Studies on Catalina Island, long established and Page 8 well equipped, the Mobius Group gathered for Project Deep Quest. Psychics Ingel Swann and Hela Hammel were given three tasks. To locate on a map an archeological site, to identify and draw specific objects within the site, to explain their history. Independently, both psychics selected the same site - an area a few hundred yards square out of an area of 1500 square miles, an area where 4,000 exploratory dives had been made in the past ten years. Their composite list included jars, winches, chains and wood of a ship which had blown up. 120 objects in all. Hela "saw" a large enigmatic square block, concrete or granite, protruding from the sea floor. Next morning, the Institute's three-million dollar submersible, the Taurus I, set out to locate the site. It had a 1,000 foot underwater capacity. As any sailor knows, they had difficulty locating the exact pin-point and, after some futile attempts the location was established. Extender arms from the Taurus probed the sand and picked up a heavily encrusted object. they then saw a piece of machinery - the winch. Wood planking appeared which, on later examination, showed signs of being burned and torn apart as in an explosion. On the last passage over the wreckage, they saw the monolithic square block - alien to the shipwreck. Since it was solid and weighed around 20 tons, it was not recovered. Perhaps some building blocks being shipped to San Francisco. Of the 1100 wrecks reported in this area, none matched this type ship. When all the evidence was reviewed by U.S.C.'s Director of Marine Studies, Don Walsh, the ship's sinking was established as about 90 years. The possibility of fraud was virtually eliminated. "They beat us clean across the board" he said. ADVENTURERS' CLUB NEWS Eleven psychic's were given standard ordinance maps of Egypt and asked to find the Pharos Lighthouse in Alexandria. Alexandria, founded in 331 B.C. lasted one thousand years and was, by far, the world's greatest city. Buried, possibly burned is its incomparable library (a million volumes). Schwartz was told repeatedly to look for the Lighthouse in Alexandria's Eastern Harbor. Space does not permit any lengthy description but among the discoveries was the Lighthouse, one of the seven wonders of the ancient world, Cleopatra's palace with a 300 meter square floor, the palace where Mark Antony fell on his sword, the ancient seawall, part of the temple of Isis, in sum, a site which will keep archeologists busy for decades. One of the two psychics who were used on site was George McMullen, 60, a hunting-fishing guide out of Nanaimo, B.C. The other was Hela Hammel. Both were taken out to the desert and asked to discover the Christian City of Maria. They had 225 square miles of sand dune to select the site. Accompanying them was a knowledgable Egyptian archeologist who, two years previously, had "done" the area with a magnometer and assured the party "there's nothing out there." The psychics not only located the site, they outlined the walls, described the tile work, delineated rooms. Until then, it was thought to have been a Roman settlement. Subsequent excavations find the psychics on the mark. In another demonstration, George was asked to put six pot shards in chronological order a feat that took archeologists three and a half years. By feeling the shards and by profound concentration five of the pieces were correctly dated and put in order. The piece cast aside ("I don't like this one. It's covered with blood") was totally out of context. It came from a March 1981 Page 9 village on the Christian-Moorish border, a village that was totally massacred. Psychic phenomenon? Schwartz would not explain it. Some experts mumble about a "bio-sensor computer system." The answer probably involves a deeper question. Is the mind, which certainly is not the brain, capable of existing outside of time and space? We don't understand it any more than three dimensional people understand a fourth dimension. (The absence of the perameters of time and space.) (Reported by Owen O'Callaghan) On stage a symmetrical, enbaubled Christmas tree, its lights blinking in greeting. The last meeting of the year. The Christmas Party. The cadence of conversation, the outbreak of laughter rose and ebbed as over one hundred adventurers and guests made their convivial way through the dinner courses. Dr. JOHN BOOTH, as Chaplain, in an inimitable invocation, managed, at the same time, to chide his fellow adventurers. While yet dining, eight bells rung sharp and clear, reminding us that we were but a part of long traditions. December 18, 1980 President DWAYNE MERRY, over the now quiet men, spoke about what a fantastic year this has been. "It has been an incredible privilege for me to serve you. I know there were times when, busy with other things, I did not mingle among you. You have to forgive me that. There are so many people to thank during the course of the year - And in this vein, Dwayne carried on, interrupted occasionally by applause, remarks, and whistles. The talk was more an occasion for comaraderie than for formal summing up. As much as any words, the mutual exchange bespoke his leadership this year. From the podium, Dwayne acknowledged Oklahoma-returned Wesley Hardin who was visiting L.A. briefly. Wesley is the waiter who left the employ of our caterer, Wanda, and who so diligently served the club the past few years. Thanks were expressed to DAVE REED who supplied the music, to LOU LOOBER who donated the tree, to JOHN BODEN who decorated it, to GERRY EVANS who from his San Luis Obispo ranch, supplied the wine. Christmas card from MASON ARMSTRONG who returns from the East in February - - a card from HENRY VON SEYFRIED, pioneer. ON SAFARI AROUND 706 with OWEN O'CALLAGHAN CHRISTMAS PARTY Since 1964, when the Club first moved into the Masonic Building, the lobby remained the same. Yet, it looked somehow more dingy and scabrous. The garishly painted elevator creaked its descent. Then you entered under the palm thatched door. Merry Christmas.Seasons Greetings. LOU LOOBER, Greeter for half a century, beamed his beatific smile. OWEN O'CALLAGHM hustled to get your badge. Inside the room was changed. A bar at the rear of the hail, tended by a gold jacketed, quick moving barkeep. To the side, a table with erect champagne bottles ready for corkpopping. AL ADAMS, BIL BROWN, COB HARMS, all ex-House Chairmen, saluted the new, incoming caretaker. Tables agroan with hors d'oeuvres, apertifs. The steaming dinner and pumpkin pie. Long, red-covered tables, aglistening with silverware and erect wine bottles. Page 10 lug a new concept: a honeymoon without the paperwork. "All you need is the honey and the money." "The reason 1 have not been here in a while, RALPH DE LOACH said, "is that I have been living in England. We have a 300-year-old cottage. And, if you don't all come at once, and you are in England, we will put you up one night and give you one meal." Sounds reasonable, eh, what? Call GEORGE ROSS for the address. At this point, President Merry called forth the Officers and Directors to the stage. First V.P. CHESTER WILCZEK, 2nd V.P. CLARENCE HARMS, Sec. DAVID MORGAN, Tres. WALLACE BAGLEY and Directors JOHN CAMERON, WILLIAM CARR, "SMOKEY" C. STORMS and Past President JOHN MAHON took their places. In absentia were HENRY KEHLER, DONALD OROSZ, and ROSS REED. "These are the men," Merry said, "who have done an outstanding job this year. I stand here to applaud them." To which the whole Club stood and added its plaudits. With the same gentlemanly grace, President Dwayne then called on and introduced the Officers and Directors of 1981. They are: First V.P. CHESTER K. KYLE, 2nd V.P. OWEN O'CALLAGHAN, Secretary, ROY ROBERTS, Treasurer, CHARLES ROSS. Holdover Directors are: Cameron, Carr and Orosz, and re-elected Storms. New Directors: PETER PARFITT and (absent) WILLIAM HAWKINSON. Finally introduced was new President GEORGE MANCHESTER. Thus, as it has been for over fifty years, passed on the power of the Club, a continuum which finds its strength and poise in the character of the men, past and present, who seriously undertake the responsibilities, the duties of their various offices. For their devotion, their time and energy, the remainder ADVENTURERS' CLUB NEWS of the membership is both in their debt and is grateful. It is fitting, proper and just that they be singled out on this singular occasion. Maintain the quality, keep the traditions and we, all of us, will have the assurance that the Adventurers' Club will endure down the corridor of time. President Dwayne turned the microphone over to President-to-be George Manchester. After a brief history of the Club, George sketched some of the objectives he hoped to achieve in the coming year. He pointed out the need for attracting new members. Compared to the early years of the Club when as many as eighty members a year were inducted, the Club today has a need to attract prospective applicants. Most prospective members are at one time or another guests of members. George urged that every member consider himself an ad hoc Membership Committeeman and actively invite men of character and adventurous spirit to attend Club meetings. Every member has a stake in the continuation of a healthy, viable Club. Sympathising with the 1st Vice Presidents' job as Program Chairman, heaviest job in the Club, Manchester called on the total membership to search out their circles of resources and where they find a worthy person or subject they should come to the aid of the Program Chairman in his work. George's third concern was housing. Whereas the city need only give a 30-day notice (to vacate) to the present landlord, the Club's lease specifies a 90-day notice to the tenant. There is a possibility the Club could be called on to move in the shorter time-period. George hopes the Housing Committee this year will diligently survey possible sites for new quarters, preferably in the downtown area. March 1981 The three priorities sounded by the Presidentelect are old ones. But they are also ever new. With the passage of time, they represent an urgency which cannot long be deferred. There is no such thing as an active club with inactive membership. All of us have an individual and shared responsibility to the Adventurers' Club. We can not leave it to George. Toastmaster, GEORGE ROSS, remarkable for his faithfulness to the Club's origin, recalled its early members. In the period of 1911-12, DAVE PASCOE had to shoot a South American revolutionary General to prevent him from impressing his railway gang into the rebel army. JOHN DAVIDSON rode his horse from the Washington-Oregon area to Southern California. RICHARD ATKINSON was actively involved in the Russian revolution (NILSSON in the Rhodesian revolt?). RENE BELBENOIT escaped from the infamous Devil's Island. A young WILL ROGERS was still twirling his lariat. Capt. JACK ROULAC had not yet had his brush with Pancho Villa. It was these men who were the cadre around which the Adventurers' Club was formed. At the foundation meeting four toasts were offered which to this day are given on every celebratory occasion. "Gentlemen stand and charge your glasses." With that, Ross called on Col. ROBERT NE!MAN, representing the Armed Forces, to give the first toast: "To Adventure, the shadow of every redblooded man." Then called upon was hunter GERRY EVANS who offered: "To the game." Representing the Air Forces (Naval) and Sailors, Lt. COB HARMS: "To every lost trail, lost comrade." Representing every gentleman adventurer, Dr. CHESTER SIDELL: "To Gentle- Page 11 men Adventurers." Following time-honored custom, George Ross then read the names of those members who, this year, passed on to the Great Adventure: They were: CHARLES BRISCO No. 663, PETER DE PAOLO No. 893, MAURICE A. MACHRIS No. 692 (Hon.), Lt. Col. DOUGLAS K. MORTON No. 907, Capt. FINN RONNE No. 793 (Hon.), JAY GOULD WALKER No. 777 (Consular), JAMES H. WOODYARD No. 535. In their memory was raised the silent toast. * S * * * Vice President and Program Chairman CHET WILCZEK came to the stage for the last time as relieved as he was delighted. Uncharacteristically laconic, he introduced member WILLARD BASCOM who, to the delight of the audience, recited a poem - 'When you were a tadpole I And I was a young fish" - an anthropologist -paleontologist explanation of the evolutionary chain, to his girlfriend while at lunch at Delmonico's. Whee! It was great fun. Thank you, Willard. After a couple of short transitional movies which took us over the cascading white waters of the 226-mile Colorado River, some members were called upon to relate their Christmas experiences. The first was a Navy yarn related with the crisp salty talk that only a combat Commander (seven combat stars) can conjure. It took place in Luzon on Christmas Eve . rather, when preparations were being made to invade Luzon. MARION CASSELL was Commander of L.S.T. No. 126 when it got a message to proceed to the Dutch East Indies and report to the Port Director's office. An S.C. would go along as escort. Neither had directions nor a chart nor description of any kind. They proceeded by Page 12 the seat of their pants. Toward evening three ships were spotted on the horizon. Since they didn't have the American cut, they had to be Japanese. On closer view, stripes were made out on the flags - the setting sun? It turned out they were the stripes of the British flag "Boy, were we glad to see those Limeys." 2:00 a.m. Christmas Eve the watch picked up land on port and starboard and dead ahead. Islands. They proceeded cautiously until daybreak. Dawn revealed three LSD's in an island harbor. From a fourth, they were given charts. Land was 400 yards ahead. At 300 yards they dropped the hook and ran out 120 fathom chain which never touched bottom. Landing, some G.I.'s directed them to operations headquarters. There was no Port Director. "But I suppose 1 am, since I am Senior Officer," said the Commander of the four LSD's. He inquired about supplies. Among those enumerated was 120,000 gallons of water which was badly needed. Therewas a dock but tied to it all day was an Army vessel. "Those dogs would not even let us in." On the dock were hoses which could take on the water. A short distance away was also a tank holding a million gallons of 100 octane gas. Christmas Eve and they couldn't even dock. Nobody aboard had gotten any mail for three months. So they anchored. Getting his officers together, they decided to slip in and buy beer (amply stored) for the men. "Well, we had a beer bust on the main deck. And we were singing carols and negro spirituals." "Right in the middle of this thing," Cassell related, "we got a red alert. The Japs started bombing. They wouldn't even leave us alone on Christmas Eve." ADVENTURERS' CLUB NEWS "The Army vessel was still sitting at the dock. The gasoline holding tank got a bomb hit. Ship and dock were ablaze. Worst fire I've ever seen." After that, it became tradition to hold beerbusts at anchor on any special occasion. No introduction was needed for the next man. If there was an Adventurer of the Year award, Col. DON TAYLOR, all by himself, would have won it - after setting seven world records in his tiny Thorpe circling the vast Pacific. "In the span of eight hours," Don began, "I played Santa Claus, made a man a hero, almost bought the farm, and lost my Christmas spirits." An AT-6 pilot, Don in the week following Pearl Harbor, was assigned to Panama. At Christmas, since no supply ship arrived, everything, including food, was in short supply. A real scarcity. Nor was there any mail. The outfit was made up of 20 P-40's and one warconfiscated J-3 Cub. Christmas Day Don was asked to fly some old mail to a group of engineers who were stranded, building an airstrip on San Bias Island. Since he was the only one who flew a cub, he agreed and, taking a bottle and the mail, off he flew. The mail delivery made one bunch of engineers happy on this happy holiday. As he was about to leave San Bias, the Chief Enigneer asked a favor. Would Don be willing to take the native Chief for a ride? It certainly would be appreciated since the engineers were using the natives for labor. Besides, it would make the Chief a hero. Don agreed. The bigfooted Chief was crammed into the back seat and instructed not to touch anything, off they flew. "I circled the island and, spotting the biggest house, I wrapped that cub around it at March 1981 70 mph." The Chief sat there. Said nothing. Not a word. Soon after, they landed. Don later found out that thereafter the engineers could get anything they wanted from the natives. And, indeed, the Chief became a hero. But the Chief's mother gave him hell because, being so close to Heaven, he should have stayed there. As a gift, Don was given a huge stalk of bananas - for which the fellows in Panama would be most grateful. Don had the assurance from the Commanding Officer that on his return (his) mail would be waiting for him. A nice flight home. "I was having a ball. I made my pitch out at the air-strip just like a fighter pilot, racked that cub up, came around the corner and started down. When I chopped the throttle, I pulled the stick back. Wouldn't budge. Nothing. I took a look over my shoulder and, sure enough, the bananas had rolled off the back seat against the stick. There we were. I yanked that turkey as hard as I could just as I touched. Well, I bounced a good 60 feet - to the amusement of the 20 fighter pilots who were watching the landing. Did I ever get the raspberry." "After I cleaned up - the banana squash, I headed for the mail room. Now, for my Christmas mail - and, with luck, presents." No mail. A U-boat had sunk the ship. BOB SILVER (whose articulation and diction makes him, by far, the easiest Club member to record) came next. Nostalgia time. Text: diary entries made in the '60's. Setting: Aboard the 42-ft. cutter Awahnee, co-skippered by NANCY GRIFFIN, now member of the Honolulu Adventurers' Club. From Papeete, Tahiti, they were headed for Born Bora, thence to Australia before the typhoons begin. Presently anchored Page 13 in the lee of a small mountainous atoll because of a stalled diesel engine. Time: December 24. "Party swam ashore. No natives all gone to Raiatea for the holidays. Spotted lone chicken which we cleaned all afternoon trying to get a "turkey" Christmas dinner. It escaped. Stayed for night." "Monday, December 25. Weighed anchor. Difficulty with wind warping around both sides of island's mountains. Given gift of a "pareau" - the native sarong. "Dropped hook Bora Bora lagoon at same time as Matson Line Monterey - on its second visit since end of war. Liner making soundings for future anchorage." Aboard was a full complement of tourists on a South Pacific island fantasy cruise. Despite the necessity of reaching New Zealand before typhoon season, tourists were promised that evening a fabulous Christmas "tamaari," a sumptuous feast of pigs-cooked-in-ground. Hopeful of a free gourmet meal, Bob presented himself to the Ship's Captain, with whom Bob's father had worked years ago. What with the soundings, the pressure of leaving, the party, the Captain was courteous but short. Sure, Bob could stay for the dinner. Only a short time later Bob found out it cost twenty dollars. What young crewman could afford that? Gracious to the end, the Captain gave his gig to Bob to return to the Awahnee. Bob's mates aboard the yacht (also under the necessity of leaving) did not quite appreciate that he returned empty handed, that he did not accept his father's friend's offer of anything the yacht could use (corking, a small generator). Worst of all Bob failed to come back with a gallon of gourmet chocolate ice-cream of which the luxury liner was amply supplied. Page 14 That Christmas evening Bob sailed out of Bora Bora under threatening gloom - and a pre. typhoon sky. The toasts done, the stories told, the four bells rung the members lingered another hour before they headed home for the Season's cheer, for another Christmas and a brand new year. (Reported by Owen O'Callaghan) January 8, 1981 SPECIAL BUSINESS MEETING (No Program) Free expression of opinion is one of the bulwarks of a free society. We certainly indulged freely at the January 8 Special Business Meeting on the subject of modifying the Club's Articles of Incorporation. Ostensibly for the purpose of the Club becoming eligible for a tax free status that would allow tax deductions to donors. Opinions for and opinions against, past experiences that were similar and good and those almost identical that turned bad, all were expounded and it might be said, at some length. To one with the experience it is reminiscent of the public meetings held by the Division of Highways, in years past, to give the public the opportunity to express opinions concerning freeway locations. It was difficult for the public to realize that important decisions cannot be based on opinions but must have facts and figures determined by research and study. Dwellers in the affected areas insisted that since our government is a democracy they should be allowed to decide on freeway locations by popular vote, it's hard to imagine more chaotic results had that system been tried. ADVENTURERS' CLUB NEWS And so it is with important Club decisions. Popular vote yes, but not based on "gut" feelings or emotion-garnered opinions. of all those who spoke pro or con only one individual offered conclusions supported by studied research, gathered facts, consultations with the I.R.S., and legal advice, and he was our Treasurer, Charlie Ross. The Club is composed of members from many professions and skills which is fortunate because we can expect knowledgeable guidance in many fields of endeavor. That fact is useless, however, unless we take advantage of it. As an Engineer, I would not presume to have an opinion on the subject based on my knowledge because I have none. Therefore, I must look to someone who has, for a worthwhile basis for my opinion. For the present, unless someone can offer opposition based on something more substantial than conjecture, "gut feeling" or emotional opinions, I must follow the lead of Charlie Ross. —Chet-Wilczek, No. 811 January 15, 1981 ON SAFARI AROUND 706 with BILL BUCHANAN Dr. ED CHATWELL announced a fishing trip to North Island of New Zealand and promised to bring back the world record yellowtail. GENE BABBITT will also be aboard. Dr. LOU HIGGER had invited as guests Boy Scout Troop 33 from Beverly Hills and they had a field day exploring the club trophies from all over the world. WAYNE BARKER announced a benefit dinner sponsored by the National Hockey League at the Century Plaza to be held February March 1981 Page 15 9, 1981 for the Children's Diabetic Foundation. An evening of top entertainment will be provided. Avery worthwhile event. CHET WILCZEK read a letter of appreciation to the club from STAN COOLEY who, due to illness, has not been able to attend recent meetings. Stan, we miss you. Get well and come back soon. A letter from Sue Stevenson thanked us for sending the cassette on which the club members had sent best wishes for his early recovery. TOM STEVENSON is learning to use his prosthesis and is walking better every day. On behalf of member DOUG MORTON, who recently passed away on a fishing trip to Baja, Ed Chatwell presented a trophy head and tail of a fourteen-foot marlin, a gift from his widow. We look forward to seeing it mounted on the wall of our clubroom. CHARLIE BRISCO's collection of five thousand slides, which JOHN DAVIDSON is busy sorting, and which ROSS REED has volunteered to furnish the necessary slide projector trays, were formally presented to the Club. OWEN O'CALLAGHAN accepted the slides on our behalf. BOB HOWARD is in the cardiac section of the Veteran's Hospital at Long Beach. He is allowed visitors and would enjoy cards from the members. A sad note marked the announcement of the passing of long time member GEORGE WURZBURGER who we will indeed miss. He was an avid collector of animal specimens. Indeed the Los Angeles County Museum owes much of its popularity to the specimens which George collected for it. He held the world record for his antelope and gazelle specimens. * * a * ADVENTURER OF THE WEEK VOLMER JENSEN has long been interested in hang gliding and is said to be the first person to make foot-launched hang gliding safe. He has developed a rigid-wing foot-launched hang glider powered by a ten horsepower motor and a similar one without the motor. He has also built and flown eleven sailplanes, one land Plane and one amphibian. Volmer sold a set of plans for the swing wing glider to David Cook of England six years ago. With it he won all the contests in England in the next four years. Then he put a tenhorse-power motor on the swing wing and was the first man to cross the channel in this type of aircraft. The Prince of Wales gave David Cook a bronze medal for his flight across the English Channel. The details of this flight are given in a letter which he wrote to Volmer Jensen. Tuesday, May 9, 1978 was the last standby date for the Channel crossing. The team for this flight had been ready since Christmas but the Dover Coast Guard had warned them of the very dangerous conditions so the flight was constantly postponed. In May the sea temperature is 5 or 6 degrees Centigrade. You can last in this water only a few minutes before dying of cold. With the VJ23 decked in the sponsor's colors, and with a full tank of gas (10 liters). A flight time of 77 minutes would be available. At 10:40 a.m. and with five minutes visibility the takeoff took place. There was much turbulence. After one hour of flying with the motor screaming at 7,000 r.p.m. with the wind four six north east it was time to get a first glimpse of the coast. It was cold, the air temperature was only 10 degrees C. He tried following the escort ship African Queen towards Page 16 the coast as time was giving out and no sight of land yet. There was only just over eight minutes of fuel left. At one hour and ten minutes he saw the misty coast of France, three and a half miles away. He turned to his right and thundered into a long power dive which gave him a ground speed of about sixty miles per hour, The Dover-Calais ferry was directly below. Even though the glider was stressed for only 30 miles per hour in rough air. The power dive had used up some two hundred feet of elevation and he was able to cross the shore at one hundred and fifty feet. Banking around northwards he eased the throttle back and made a normal five step landing. There was less than five minutes of fuel left. The time from England was one hour and fifteen minutes. Volmer Jensen then showed a motion picture film of his new ten horsepower aircraft which is capable of flying a 200 pound pilot. This is a Swing Wing, beautifully crafted, small and elegantly finished. The thin wooden lead edge of the wing, 1/32" thick, is polished with a high gloss to show the beautiful grain of the ADVENTURERS' CLUB NEWS natural wood. This works much better than fabric or metal for a glider. Takeoff is quite easy, but landings are quite fast in a five to eight mile wind. The propeller is only 28" in diameter. There is good control with the elevator, rudder and the ailerons. With these three controls you can no make a bad turn. The control stick is only about a foot high. For the Len horsepower airplane you gear down the engine 3.6 to I and use a 48 inch diameter propeller and get a lot more thrust. It cruises at about 28 m.p.h. if you build it yourself it costs about $1,200.00, the engine is $200.00 more. This gets about nine and a half horsepower. A Gilmore belt is used to gear it down. This is a cerrated belt. Mirage Dry Lake and Oxnard are favorite flight locations, as well as San Fernando airport. With one spark plug, one cylinder and one piston, it. is best not to plan on very distant flights. The name swing wing means just that, you are sitting in a little swing beneath the wing and if it is rough air you will be swinging around a bit. This is an experimental aircraft and there are as of now no plans to attempt supersonic speeds. A Word From the Editor... The programs that have been presented for our information and enjoyment on Thursday evenings continue to grow in interest and importance. Because of this the reporting of this material takes a great deal of space. The program for January 15, 1981 will run to 3Y2 pages and should be printed in its entirety in one issue. Limitations on printing and binding equipment available to the editor prevents the expansion of this publication to a 20-page edition. Hence, the program that would normally appear with the News section of this date will appear as the lead article in the April issue. "Face To Face With Man-Eating Sharks" by Dr. Donald Nelson is something you will not want to miss. RC W The Adventurers' Club, Los Angeles 706 West Pico Boulevard Los Angeles, California 90015 Entered as Second Class Postage at the Post Office at Los Angeles, California POSTMASTER: Address Correction Requested Return Postage Guaranteed Mr. George M.flChO9tt' 12948 Woodbridge Street Studio City, Calif. 91604 3/81